In 1585, the British painter and explorer John White created images of Carolina Algonquian Indians. These images were collected and engraved in 1590 by the Flemish publisher and printmaker Theodor de Bry and were reproduced widely, establishing the visual prototype of North American Indians for European and Euro-American readers. In this innovative analysis, Michael Gaudio explains how popular engravings of Native American Indians defined the nature of Western civilization by producing an image of its “savage other.” Going beyond the notion of the “savage” as an intellectual and ideological construct, Gaudio examines how the tools, materials, and techniques of copperplate engraving shaped Western responses to indigenous peoples. Engraving the Savage demonstrates that the early visual critics of the engravings attempted-without complete success-to open a comfortable space between their own “civil” image-making practices and the “savage” practices of Native Americans-such as tattooing, bodily ornamentation, picture-writing, and idol worship. The real significance of these ethnographic engravings, he contends, lies in the traces they leave of a struggle to create meaning from the image of the American Indian. The visual culture of engraving and what it shows, Gaudio reasons, is critical to grasping how America was first understood in the European imagination. His interpretations of de Bry’s engravings describe a deeply ambivalent pictorial space in between civil and savage-a space in which these two organizing concepts of Western culture are revealed in their making. Michael Gaudio is assistant professor of art history at the University of Minnesota.
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This new volume is a perfect addition to the bookshelves of those who enjoyed the author's earlier book on the Savage 99, which has sold more than 5,000 units.
As Brian W. Dippie has shown, this basic idea remained a virtual constant among white intellectuals and policy makers during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Dippie, Vanishing American, xi–xii. See also Berkhofer, White Man's ...
Sound, Image, Silence includes readings of Brazilian landscapes by the Dutch painter Frans Post, a London portrait of Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison’s early Kinetoscope film Sioux Ghost Dance, and the work of Thomas Cole, founder of the ...
This construction calls to mind Walter Benjamin's idea of literary translation, according to which an original poem incurs a debt to its translation insofar as the latter reveals—through the process of translation—the fundamental ...
This is the thrilling story of Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues, the first European artist to journey to what is now the continental United States with the express purpose of recording its wonders in pencil and paint.
Henry Timberlake, The Memoirs of Lieut. ... See Duane H. King, “Mysteries of the Emissaries of Peace: The Story behind the Memoirs of Lt. Henry Timberlake,” in A. F. Rogers ... Cherokee British Relations 1756–1765 (Cherokee, 2009), p.
... Indian murderers turned up in the crude woodcuts published in various editions of Mary Rowlandson's popular captivity story, ANarrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, which first appeared in 1682.89 In ...
A History of the Rise and Progress of the Arts of Design in the United States
America became the world leader in security engraving by the 1860s, a result of the antebellum banking system; and picture engraving was the key defense against counterfeiting.